Overview:

Micron Technology opened at $1,078.00 on Wednesday after a 13% single-session collapse Tuesday, bouncing 4.1% in premarket ahead of its fiscal Q3 earnings report due after the close. Analysts polled by FactSet expect EPS of $20.83 on revenue of $35.75 billion. The S&P 500 opened at 7,380 and extended gains to roughly 7,406 in early trading, with key support at 7,370–7,380. Alphabet's pending Dow inclusion and SpaceX's continued post-IPO selling rounded out the morning's key mover list.

NEW YORK — Micron Technology opened at $1,078.00 on Wednesday morning, bouncing off Tuesday’s wreckage as traders positioned ahead of one of the most consequential earnings prints in the semiconductor calendar this year.

📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this open: the bounce in Micron is technically logical but fundamentally fragile. A 13% single-session drop followed by a premarket bid is classic oversold mechanics — it doesn’t tell you the thesis has changed. The real question is whether tonight’s print validates the 1,000% profit growth narrative or starts to crack it. I’m watching $1,054 as the line in the sand; a break below that intraday low signals the bounce has exhausted itself before the report even drops. The Anthropic supply deal is genuinely interesting as a multi-year anchor for HBM demand, but the SK Hynix pivot toward commodity DRAM is a quiet counterargument the bulls need to answer. If Micron guides conservatively on DRAM pricing, that consensus target of $975.47 starts to look less like a floor and more like a ceiling.

NEW YORK, June 24, 2026 — U.S. equities opened broadly higher Wednesday, with the S&P 500 opening at 7,380 and extending to a 0.35% gain in early trading, the Nasdaq advancing 0.62%, the Russell 2000 rising 0.41%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average adding roughly 0.20%. The session opened against a backdrop of Tuesday’s AI-infrastructure selloff, and the morning bounce carried the feel of a market buying the dip selectively rather than expressing genuine conviction.

The Tape Is Healing, but the Scar Is Still Visible

Tuesday’s selloff was concentrated and pointed. AI infrastructure names led the decline as investors revisited the central question that has dogged the sector all year: whether hyperscaler capital expenditure programs are translating into returns that justify the memory and chip demand assumptions baked into valuations. The S&P 500’s immediate support zone at 7,370–7,380 held overnight, and Wednesday’s early strength reflects that technical reality as much as any fundamental reassessment.

That said, Wednesday’s recovery deserves scrutiny. The Russell 2000’s 0.41% gain suggests some rotation into smaller-cap names, which typically indicates broader risk appetite rather than a narrow tech-driven bounce. Whether that broadens into sustained buying or fades as the morning progresses will depend heavily on what tone Micron sets after the bell. For context on how Tuesday’s chip-sector pressure fits into the longer arc of the AI trade, see our earlier analysis: Is the Semiconductor Selloff Bigger Than One Bad Day in Seoul?

The next psychological level below current S&P 500 prices is 7,300, followed by roughly 7,200. A hold above the 7,370–7,380 gap-fill area into the afternoon would be constructive. A break below it — particularly if Micron disappoints — would put 7,300 back in play before Thursday’s open.

Data Visual
Wednesday Opening Gains: Index Performance at the Bell (June 24, 2026)
Shows how each major U.S. index opened on Wednesday morning, giving traders a snapshot of early market breadth.
Wednesday Opening Gains: Index Performance at the Bell (June 24, 2026)
Values in %

Opening Bell Standout — Micron Technology (MU)

Micron opened at $1,078.00, with a Wednesday day range of $1,054.13 to $1,105.00 in the early session. The stock had collapsed 13% on Tuesday amid the broader semiconductor selloff before rebounding 4.1% in premarket trading. Analysts polled by FactSet expect earnings of $20.83 per share on revenue of $35.75 billion when Micron reports fiscal third-quarter results after tonight’s close.

The setup heading into the print is unusual: Micron enters its own earnings report having already been punished. That dynamic cuts both ways. The stock has absorbed significant selling pressure, which could reduce downside on a modest miss. But it also means the bar for a positive reaction has risen — a beat-and-raise is almost certainly required to sustain a post-earnings rally of any duration.

Adding a structural dimension to the story, Micron announced a strategic collaboration with Anthropic on June 22, spanning memory and storage architecture design, a multi-year supply agreement, and a strategic investment in Anthropic’s Series H funding round. Micron Chief Business Officer Sumit Sadana called it a move to “innovate and scale next-generation AI infrastructure.” The deal matters less for its immediate revenue impact — multi-year supply agreements take time to show up in financials — and more for what it signals about Micron’s positioning in the AI memory stack. High-bandwidth memory tied to frontier model training is the high-margin growth vector. The Anthropic deal is a public statement that Micron intends to be at that table.

Key Stat
751.64%
Micron’s 52-week price change — a number that explains both why Tuesday’s 13% drop felt violent and why traders are still willing to buy the open at $1,078.

Micron’s 52-week range runs from $103.38 to $1,213.56. The stock that opened Wednesday at $1,078 is a fundamentally different equity than the one trading below $200 a year ago, and that context matters for understanding the scale of the correction risk if tonight’s guidance disappoints. Key technical support sits at $1,020 and $980 — levels worth marking now. Our earlier piece examining the sustainability of Micron’s valuation at four-digit prices is worth revisiting: Is Micron Worth $1 Trillion After a 1,000% Earnings Surge?

Analyst Note
TD Cowen’s Krish Sankar raised his Micron price target to $1,500, while RBC Capital’s Srini Pajjuri lifted his target to $1,200, maintaining an Outperform rating. Both analysts believe the current DRAM upcycle has an additional five to six quarters of runway, driven by AI computing demand. The consensus among 30 analysts tracked as of June 22 sits at a Buy rating with an average price target of $975.47 — notably below Wednesday’s opening price, which means the street’s average target is already underwater relative to where MU is trading. That gap is either a sign of targets lagging a fast-moving stock or a quiet warning that consensus valuation has not fully caught up with the run.
Data Visual
Micron Technology (MU): Analyst Price Targets vs. Wednesday Open
Compares Micron’s Wednesday opening price against key analyst price targets, showing where the Street sees upside or downside from current levels.
Micron Technology (MU): Analyst Price Targets vs. Wednesday Open
Values in $

The Other Movers: Alphabet Gets Its Dow Seat, SpaceX Keeps Sliding

Alphabet traded between $346.90 and $349.15 in the early session, with shares hovering around $348.79 after S&P Global confirmed Alphabet will replace Verizon in the Dow Jones Industrial Average before the June 29 market open. The roughly 0.5% move is measured given the significance of the news — Dow inclusion typically triggers mechanical buying from index funds that track the 30-stock average. The more interesting read is the timing: Alphabet enters the Dow as a $348 stock with a forward P/E of roughly 26 against what analysts estimate is an 82% earnings growth rate, and with Google Cloud having grown 63% year-over-year to $20.03 billion in Q1 2026. The 24/7 Wall St. price target of $445.38 implies roughly 20% upside from current levels. The index inclusion could bring incremental institutional flows next week that the market is not fully pricing today.

SpaceX continued its post-IPO adjustment, falling 1.61% to $153.60 in early trading. The stock’s 52-week range of $135.00 to $225.64 frames the volatility — IPO-era euphoria tends to compress quickly in high-profile listings as retail positioning normalizes against institutional price discovery. The day range of $147.11 to $165.50 reflects significant intraday spread, a signal of thin liquidity relative to price action. SpaceX is not yet a tape-driver for the broader market, but its trajectory feeds the narrative around whether the post-IPO SpaceX can hold above $150 as a psychological floor.

What the Next 45 Minutes Will Tell You

The first hour of trading is the diagnostic. Wednesday’s early strength needs to be tested against volume. A broad-market advance on thin volume following Tuesday’s heavy selling is a relief rally, not a reversal. Watch whether the S&P 500 can hold above 7,380 — the gap-fill support — as we move through mid-morning. A sustained hold above that level into noon shifts the probability toward a constructive close. A fade back below it reopens the path to 7,300.

For Micron specifically, the intraday action is essentially a positioning exercise ahead of tonight’s report. Moves above $1,105 before the close would suggest aggressive pre-earnings buying from traders willing to take overnight exposure. A drift back toward $1,054 signals that the opening bounce has been sold into. Neither move changes what matters: the earnings call after the bell and, more specifically, Micron’s guidance on DRAM pricing dynamics for the next two quarters. Separately, Alphabet’s Dow inclusion mechanics will become more relevant as the June 29 effective date approaches — index rebalancing flows rarely move on announcement day alone. For context on broader rate dynamics feeding into today’s tape, see: Is Wednesday’s Calm Masking the Next Move in Rates?

Level / Event Value Signal
S&P 500 gap-fill support 7,370–7,380 Hold signals constructive session; break below reopens path to 7,300
MU intraday floor $1,054.13 Wednesday session low; break below signals bounce is exhausted pre-earnings
MU technical support $1,020 / $980 Confluence support zone; a post-earnings miss that breaks $1,020 targets $980 next
GOOGL Dow effective date June 29, 2026 Index rebalancing flows accelerate into Friday; watch for institutional accumulation late week
SpaceX psychological floor $150.00 Round-number support; a close below $150 would test the $147 session low and post-IPO demand

Wednesday’s opening is a recovery session, not a resolution. The S&P 500’s hold above 7,380 is the minimum technical requirement for the bulls to claim the day. Micron will trade on sentiment until 4:00 PM ET, at which point fundamentals take over. Watch the $1,054 floor — that level will tell traders more about the tape’s conviction than any morning commentary. Alphabet’s Dow story is a slow burn that becomes more relevant as Friday approaches. SpaceX remains a volatility vehicle with wide spreads and thin institutional sponsorship for now. The session’s real verdict arrives after the close.


This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

Emma Davis is co-founder and editor of PreMarket Daily, an independent U.S. financial markets publication delivering daily pre-market equity analysis, earnings coverage, and macroeconomic commentary for...